Gleaner_19820507

the Gleaner
VOL. 57, NO. 16 NAZARETH COLLEGE OF ROCHESTER MAY 7, 1982
VILLELLA TO BE COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER
Edward Villella, the roost celebrated
male dancer in the lIistory of Ameri·
can ballet. will deliver the main ad·
dress at Nazaretll College's 55th an·
nuaol commencement. Sunday. May 16
at noon.
Villella. one of the country's leading
spokesmen for the arts. will add,ess a
record number of graduates during
the ceremony which will be held on
the east lawn of the campus. His
appea,~ at Nazareth will be one 01
Ihe highlights of the college's ye3"1ong
"Celebration of the Arts" commemo:r
rating the 15th anniversary of the
Nazareth Arts Center.
A total of 705 graduates-26 more
IMn the pwr.ous high recorded in
19n- are expected to receive degrees
during the ceremony which will feature
the awarding of honorary Doctor of
laws di>9rees to Villella; Dr. AI"'" A.
KuusislO, president of Hobart and
Wmiam Smith Colleges; and Eileen
Banquet
Honors
Undergrad
by K"lhy K .. hoe
Goodbyes and hellos marked
speeches at the Nazareth Undergrad­uate
Associatioo's Fourth Annual fn.
a"""'lTal Banquet held last Tlmrs<ioly.
April 28. The banquet honored this
year 's and next I"!M'S club presidents,
as well as il\ilugurated the President
and VIC<! President of the Undergradu,
ate Association, N<.zareth's studo!nt
government.
Goodbyes were said by graduating
senior Jim Stefaniak, President 01 the
lJndergrad during the 1981.s2 school
year, Reminiscing about the past yeIlr,
Stefaniak said that he feels the prot,.
lem of student apathy has Iesse!\ed
!iOTrIeWhat. More students this year
are in"..ofved with wrrununity affairs,
he said, citing Na"""'th'$ outstanding
participation in rrli'lrathons, including
the $OItball maratnon, dance rrIi'Ira'
thon, rockathon, arod recent jump
rope rrIi'Iratnon.
Stefaniak said that he was pleased
with performance of clubs and their
leaders this year, and that his time at
Nazareth has been enjoyable.
"! hope that I can come back in 10
or 20 or 50 years arod lind an active
and involved student body,~ he said.
Hellos ""ITe in order as Pres;dent
Kielera SlM;)rt in Sam BeIlif>3(!r as
Undergrad President ~nd Lori Marra
as VIC<! President.
Bellinger served in the past year as
Vice President, and Marra as Secre­tary.
Bellinger told the assembly that his
goal is to make the student body more
_are 01 the Undergrad Association.
Many students, M said, do not know
tM purpose of the student gowm­ment,
which is run by and for the
students.
"In the past," Bellinger said, "I've
lelt that there has been a 9"P in
communications between the students
arod the Undergrad. I'm hoping to
bridge that gap next year."
Continued on Page 4
Malone, prolessor 01 harp at Eastman
School 01 Music.
There are 409 candidates for bacca·
taureate degrees arod 296 for the Mas·
tel of Science in Education deg.ees.
Villella presently serves as artistic
coordinator 01 the Es\evSI<y Ballet
Company of New York City and has
re.:ent ly been named a pfOducer·
director of the "Dance in America" TV
series.
In r«ent yea'" he has championed
the callS'! 01 the arts as a member 01
the NMionaf Counc~ on the Arts, the
National Endowmomt for the Arts
Dance Advisory Panel, and the Com­millee
for Cultural Affairs for the City
of New York.
Villelta is best known, however, for
his dancing, which combi.-- physical
prowess with drarmtic artistry, arod his
innuence in populilrizing the role of
tM rrli'lle in American ballet.
COllgl'alulat ions
to the
CLASS
OF
'82
FROM THE
GLEANER STAFF
LaVecchia
Named
Editor
Marc laV«chia., sophomore at Na·
zareth, has been ~ editor.in-chioef
of the Gleoner for tM 1982-S3 school
year. . .
laVecchia has served as news edi­tor
for the Nazareth student news­paper
this past year. He has wri1ten
many articles for the publication ",.
duding a weekly satirical column,
"Much To Do About Nothirl9.~
laVecchia said that he would like 10
keep the paper's format basically the
sarno!. One of his goals, he said, is to
encourage more students to partici·
pate.
"I would like to concentrate espe'
cially on having incoming freshmen
join the staff." he said. ~AIso, we'll try
to give as much recognition as possi­ble
to our regular staff members."
LaV«chia replaces junior Kathy
Kehoe in the po$t, Kehoe has ac·
cepted the. po$ition 01 news editor
next yeIlr.
Other editorial positions named are:
pnoto editor, Art Smith; sports editor,
Jim Jabir: advoertiamg editor, Leslie
Eliot: and business manager, Ralph
ford.
He joi!\ed the New York City Ballet
in 1957 and beciome a principal in 1960
at the age 01 23. Aeclilimed from the
beginning as a virtuoso capable 01
handling vigorous athletic roles with
rare fmes.se, he developed into an
actor with powerful stage presence.
lnat rare combination Was 1TIO$t ap.
plauded by the critics for his portrayal
of the title role in "Prodi9a/ Son,~
The first Arno!rican rrli'lie d/lncer to
perf<>nn with the Royal Danish Ba/let,
Villelta is the only American to be
asked to dance an encore at the
Bobhoi Theatre in Moscow. He has
given command performances for four
Anwrican presidents, starred in the
musical "Brigadoon" on Broadway and
performed frequently on television. In
1975 he won an Emmy award for his
CBS TV children's ballel, "Harlequin,"
and has acted as narrator for the
"Choreography by Balanchine" series
for the Public Broadcasting System.
Edward Villella, commer":e ........ 1
5p"ake r.
ART CHAIRMAN MAKES
STATEMENT AT MEETING
by Alison Kent
Dr. Roger Adams, chairman of the
N"""""h "rt cicpartmc"t, d«u0Gcd
tM tennination of sculpture and figure
drawing teacher Sam Hudson and the
Nazareth financial sit""tion and its
effects on the art department at the
Thursday rno!eting 01 the Art Associa·
tion. Statements of protest were
handed out by a small group of stu­dents
at the beginning of the meeting
e~pressing their disapproval of lhe
dKision to cui the art faculty.
According to Dr. Adams, the tenni·
nation hinges around declining enroll·
ment in the art department. The nor­mal
policy r"9"Tding f<>eully cuts is one
termination for every 20 students lost
in a department. Currently, the art
department has an average 01 10.53
STudents per eta .. , with an estimated
m of art classes having W'Oc\er 10
students. BeQ.use of this as well as
the Reagan administration and federal
furoding cutbacks, the an department
e~pects approximately 200 students
less next year. In contrast, business
department enrollment has skyrock·
eted, creating an urgent need for more
instructors. As a result it was deemed
necessary to instate cutbacks in the
an department in order to counter·
balance other rapidly expanding de·
partments.
The problem 01 dec~ning enro/lment
Looking Ahead:
is not distinctive to Nazareth, ard
AdlI_ cited statistic« ... mna!ing tMt
by 1990, tM total number 01 college
.tuden,. in N ....... Vorl< colloges will
have declined by 40%. Nazareth as
well as the other schools will have to
fight to maintain their current enrol­lments
in all areas in the future.
By issuing Hudson a terminal (one
year Iinal) contract now, Adams k>lt
his chances for future employment
would be greatly improved, becallS'! 04
the rapidly ~ning ootlook for aca­demic
positions IMt he would u1ti­rrIi'Itely
have to encounto.tT had he been
dismissed farther on in the fulUre, and
denied tenure. The present poor col­lege
financial trends would have made
it impossible for the art department to
retain Hudson for more than a rrli'lKi'
mum period of tIM;) years. Mr. Hud·
son's duties are also such that they
can be taken ove-r by other l<>eulty
members, eliminating the necessity for
part-time h<!lp after he leaves. The
other two faculty mernbe", being con·
sidered {or tennination, Lynn Duggan
arod SUsan Rowley, cotJld not have
been compensated for in this "",Iter
without the quality of the department
greatly suffering.
Students wishing to protest Mr.
Hudson's dismissal are requested to
sign the petition currently circulating
in the art department asking for his
reinstatement.
Surviving a Training Program
by Mary Ellen Buccofumo, Na zareth alumna
W~I you receive a college degree in highly skated and competitive training
May? And are you wondering about program at IBM. Tho.tTe are rrIi'IJJage'
how you're going to land a job after ment program!! in several of the local
graduation? Despite the bleak outlook, department stores as well. Getting
there are possibilities out there for into some of these programs may not
you. l1>ere is at least one career path be an that difficult. Staying in is the
for you in rrli'lnagement training. Tram. True test of your abaity. Who does and
lng programs run the gamut from who doesn't succeed in these pro-manager
in charge of the night shift at grams arod why?
local fast food restaurants to the Continued on Page 2
EDITORIAL
n.. G ....... wd<:omos opioIiono!rom ,he
student' body, fo<ulty, CI>d D<inini$Irnlion.
lAIr ... 10 lhe editor ""'lI be pbad .. Old
enveIopo! on ,"" door of !lie U~
Acliuitie$ RO(m, 0< ~ 10 Til<!
Gleane., Nazareth Co/Joge, P.O. Box
4IYJ7. Rochakr. N.Y. 14610.
by Kathy Kehoe
h', very hard for: me to realize that
my year as editor of the Glmner is
~'.
r took a chance, .. big chance. when
r started as C.,..,ruIOT this faD. Due to
the resignation of the entire staff of the
prior year, Nazal"flth W3S lett withoo,lt II
newspaper. Hoping 10 reinstate the
publicaTion, Undergrad President Jim
Stefaniak posted signs advertising II
""*"ing.
No One in the room ,hal evening
had ....... had previous experience wilh
a newspaper.
Somehow, II.'E! produced. It was
painful M first, and in a Wily, still is.
Novicn we, tile layout for ,he first
is.we kepi US up until 2 a.m.
And lha.l night wasil', unique.
I knew from the starl that we would
have 10 work hard. But what! couldn',
foresee was the tremendous drain on
my lime: Monday kl)oO>Ul, Tuesdlly
meeting, Wednesday. lrip to the prin·
ter. ThU1$Clay, delw:iline, Friday an
~ue O\l!. Cycled and re-cycled.
t also oouldn~ foresee the mistakes,
Lots of mistakes, caused by ignor­ance,
or IT\IIybe just plain stupidity.
But mistakes are the way we've
learned. And no matter what blundorrs
we've made, we haven', quit trying to
ooour best. And don't int€lld to,
Most of all, I couldn't forsee working
with 50 ""'ny good people. Yes, we've
had our difficulties. We have fought,
screamed., smoked. and laughed to­gether.
We lite certainly not
homogenous-in lact, [ have to admit
that we are a rather diverw, perhapS
even !IIZ<>ml. group of characters.
I am proud to call these oe<lIlIe my '""It "w"a s J:,y my own choice that [ have
stepped down frOm my post this year.
I love the Glecne., and will continue to
put as much of myself as I can into
this publica.tion neKt year; in fact, I will
be news editOT. I Simply feel tMt it's
time to give someone else II chance.
And so. I relinquish the editorship of
the Gleaner to Marc LaVec<:hia. Per.
hapS more than anyone else on the
Slllff Marc has givw of himself to the
Glee"."..
Good Luck. Marc.
Looking Ahead
Continued /rom Page I
An important pOint to remember is
that this is II training prOgram. As
simple ... it sounds, the word is
fraught with implications. It means
that you will be starting at the bottoml
Be sure thllt yoo have yourself and
your position within the company in
the proper perspective. Don'1 act like
a vice'president and don't expect to
be treated like one. The point is thllt
most of what you learned in college is
of value only to yourself, and what is
impOrtant is thllt you demonstrate that
you are trai ...... bIe.
The second point to keep in mind is
to let otiwrs know who you are.
Translated into action, this means for
example, having coffe<! with the super·
visor. If this seems to bold OT too out
of character for you to attempt, organ·
ize othen in the training prOgram to
go with you and then ask the bo6s to
attend. Be prepared to talk OOsine5S
intelligently. Now may be the time to
discuss cOll5truclive ideas, sugges·
tions. and your plans for the Iuture. A
great dell r:A how a IUpervisor per· ceM!s.!'oY ilt!trtlugh your pet'IOr.ality,
not ... ~ .ice perlonnance. Make
IUrlAhal; he ;. ..mg enough of both!
Continued on I"'9f! 4
MUCH
TO DO
ABOUT
Shannon to
Speak at
Baccalaureate
Mass
Msgr. William Shannon, lhe central
figure in religious education at Naza·
reth College for the past 37 years. will
deliver the main address at a multi·
faith baccalaureate service at the col·
lege On Saturday, May 15 at 4:30 p.m.
The ceremony ...,;11 bOl held on the east
lawn of the campus.
NOTHING
~Good evening ladies and 9I'nlte·
men and we~ 10 This Is Your
Soap Operal Il"s the exciting new
game show where everybody loses
and becomes heartbroken, distressed,
suicidal. or. if the player is lucky, all
thr"",. leT's introduce our first player.
What is your name and where are yoo
Iromr
"'Jim, my n.art"II' is GeTH!ral Jim Hos·
piTal and I am from Nome, Alaska
where I was stationed as a general and
surgeon fOT six years. I have twenty·
seven kids. two wives. four mistresses,
and a partridge in a pear tree.w
-rhat's grt-at Jim, and why did you
de<:ide that you URlnted to bOl on Th~
Is Your Soap Opera?"
"WeU Jim, thi!; show is lhe closest 1
can come to rellily ml!$Sing up my
head withoul taking drugs. although !
have beerI I>ddic:ted to a variety of
different drugs since [ was twelve and
my father died when I was eleven, so
tha!"s why I decided to takt- drugs in
the first pIac", because my mother had
a miscarriag<! righl bOlfore the wOOding
and ... w
·n,."t'~ 9"""1 Jrn, .....d !>OW lei'.
bring on our nexl contesTant. What is
your name and where are you from?"
"'Jim, my ...... me is Commy Uw, but
my friends call me Commuter lOT
short. [come from Nome, Alaska, also'
and [ am a typical housewife whose
husband won't let me out of the house
so [ have decided to be On the show
against his wishes. but he11 probably
be out looking lOT me right now and
when he finds me he'l probably beat
me to a pulp. By the way. if you lao!<
in the front row, you will see all my
children."
~Faanntastic, aha-aha. Let's start
the game. alright?"'
Applause.
~ Jim. you go in the sound·
proof/bullet proof prison and 1 will ask
Cammy a few questions. We will see
whllt the aud>enct- thinks of the
answers and the aud>ence will judge
the win"",. You aU set. Jim? 1 said.
'Are you aU set?"'
"Yes. Jim. and I am ready to win."
"Great. Aha·aha. Okay, Commy,
here is your first question. If you foond
out that your father is really your
mother after a massive se~..;hange
operation and yDUJ daughter really
belonged to your sister wllo was fool·
ing around with yoor husband even
though Jane tt-lls you that thi!; is all
true despite the fact everyone at the
office denies it, would you A) Commit
suicide, B) Cho:::«e the sweet·n·sour
sauce for your shrimp. or c) Pull a gun
from your sk;"t and shoot everyone in
the offICe?"'
"Jim, I' would probably pick A)
• CommiT suicide."
"Hey. Commy, lhe audience IovOO
your response. As a "",Iter of fact.
they all gave guns and knives for you
to do the job right now. Sut r guess
IMI is typicol. As all you soap opera
fa ...... tks know. There is nothing better
IMn .. good 5t<>te 01 dep,e=ion."
The college's 55th annual com­mencement
exercises will be !.lid Sun­day,
May 16 al noon.
M5gr. Shannon, . fonner Naz<>,eth
chaplain, earlier this year announced
that he wiU step down as chairman of
the religious studies department this
May. In December he will ret;"e as a
tuU·tifne faculty membOlr but will con·
Tinue to teach on a parT-time basis.
'A prolifIC author, MSgr. Shannon's
latest book, ~Thoma!; Merton's Dark
Path" was pubbshed in 1981. He is the
d;"ector of the Thomas Merton S0-
ciety of Rochester.
The theme oi the baccalaureate
ceremony will bOl "Asp;,.ations.w Partic,
ipants in the ceremony will be Rev.
Norman Tanck. chaplain; Rev. Paul
Nochelski, associate chaplain: Rev.
Gloria Fish, assistant cMplain; and
PresidenT Robert A. Kidera. Student
representatives will be James Stefa·
niak, president of the college'. under·
graduate association, and senior class
officers: Margaret Danaher, president;
Laura Sullivan, vice president; and
Patricia. Deck~r. secretary.treasurer.
Music wl1i be provided by the Nan·
reth CoDego!' Concert Choir under the
direcTion of Edward T. Schell and the
SIring and Bass Ensemble. Paul Rowe
of the Nazareth music faculty will be
the boo,ilon., ooO.:HI.t.
the Gleaner
Editor in Chief, ... Kathy Kehoe
Business Manager. ,Joel Odell
News Editor................ Marc LaVecchia
Co-PhotOgraphy Editor.. Denise l.iegey
Co-PhotOgraphy Editor ....................... Art Smith
Sports Editor. . ............. James Jabir
Asst. Sports Editor. . ........ _ .......... Todd Sherman
Staff: Deborah Bartlett, Carol Bolton. Albert Capozzelli. Leslie ElI;,;,tt,
Patty Ellis. Ralph Ford. Allison Kent, Barb Kelley. Barrington Mclean.
Pat Seaman. Lorena Sins. Janet Sroka, Dave Webb.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Nowhere to Eat?
Declines OAS. Membership
To The Editor.
In JanuaTY [ accepted an invitation
to Omega Alpha Sigma, to discover
what its Iunctions and goals would bOl.
After ClIreful consideration I must now
de<:line my membership as SecretaTY
01 OAS., as I ha ..... found that it is a
:;elect group TMI has set standards
which it. own members do not fnee\,
As President of the Undergraduate
Association ! am wen aURI,,, that a
primaTY function of the U.A. is to
promote leadership among the various
organiUltioo& in an attempt to better
serve The student body. However. 1
lind it is unfortu ...... te thllt members of
O.A.S., and its 5uppoo"ters. feel they
fIl!.'St deviate from the U.A., only in an
attempt to fuJfiI[ the same ~. In
light of this lact, ' feelthllt the time put
into OAS. would be better spent ~ it
were uti~:ted to promote clubs within
the U.A.
[ truly do not believe that O.A.S.
has upheld the high standards which
OtTO A. Schults set. The,e/ore, [ feel
tMt it is the obligation of the adminis·
tration to take a closer look at what is
Taking place.
II is impOrtant that stuoonts educate
themS>2Nes on the ""ture of any such
dub or organization as to what it
appears to bOl an<! whai it truly is. ft is
the lack of such responsible scrutiny
at this college that bias fraternities
such as OAS. thrive and prosper on.
Sincerely,
~I J. BeDinger
President 01 the Undergraduate
Associa.tion, 1982-&3
To the Editor:
I just wanted To drop off this quick
note, seeing as it is the end of the
semester, to ask a question. Why was
it necessary to hold a banqueT last
Thursday, April 30th, in the only place
on campus that commuler. can get
supper on campus before They 9" to
night clas$es? It's not that I object to
banquets. nor is it thaI I couldn'T go
anywhe,e else. [ suppose, also, that r
could have brought something from
home if I had known of the event. The
problem is that [ was not aware thaT
there would bOl no place to get supper
on campus, (besides the dorms, w!.lre
I shouldn't HAVE to go) and, since I
was on campus all day, [ didn't feel
That I should ha ..... to go somewhere
else. I did. I was hungry. Sut, I wish
that such """,n\S would bOl a lillie more
publiciud in the Iutlll"'! 50 plans can
bit ~ for these SOIU 0/ oillliltiops.
1hf.ill< )'0\1 . ,';
A hungry commuter.
May 7, 1982 TltE GLEANER Pa!ll!3
A
DINNERVIEW
by
Allison Kent
Ah yes, summer ;. here-or almost
here anyway_ And 01 COUJ'$e wann
...... ather would """'" be compiete
without thilt delectable food 01 the
gods: ice cream. Along with Coppe1"'
tone, cut 0/1 short., and swimming
pools, ice cream is a oe~1e $!lJ"IVI"II'I"
instutition in America. There are so
many forms and n..wrs that it boggles
the mind- ubT/I$, custard, hard cone,
soIt cone, 6':1> oonerfal, ~ ootterlat..
it rn<>k"" one W<Iflt to scream with
confusion! And now, ice cream has
been given a ~ttle chic ... well. Gefa·
lO's ha$ ~ ice cr~am from bar9ain
base""",t to T.ffany'. with class.
Starting out with flavor idea. de·
rioed from an unusual C"Ufornia ice
cream siand, owner Eric Kase deveI·
ope<! the Gelato concept wilhin a year
aller returning 10 Rochester. It has
.ince blossomed to two branch SlOfes
and roasts some of lhe besl ice cream
in lown, wilh cUrTenl flavors now
extended to 35. On a given day. 12
flaVOTS are availablo! in elOCh store, and
one CIlIl fir.::I anything lrom lhe fam, iar
,",nu!;,. to the e!e9ant and ewr·popular
amaretto. containing bils 0/ chopped
amareno cookies in almond ice cream
(which. incidenlaDv, 9"1$ my personal
vote as lhe great."I...).
GeIaIO'S ice cream is particular."
unique in that il ronlain$ 14% buth!r­fat,
less air. and 00 artificial color$ or
fIavo" . For the uninitiated. butterfat
rontent is an indication 01 the richness
OT creaminess 01 an ice cream. A
percentage of 14 Or TnJre designates a
pa.rticu!;,rly smooth teXlure, wilh mo61
ice cream <oeighing in al considerably
less, u"";Dy f>.a':I>. Air content is a
determination of the density oIlhe ice
cream itself. Gelato's being m heav·
ier than most ice creams. AD Ihis
points to an ice cN!am that is unusu­ally
full, c .... amy. and smooth in tex·
lure and absolutely 5Crumplious to eat
/1$ wen as more nutritious than mo6t.
for those indifferent to the wonders
0/ ice cream, Gelato's also makes
eight different kind!; 0/ pasta in ihe
Ironl window o/;ts Park A....."ue store.
Three of the sauceo are horrK:mMe,
the O1her two prov'ded by the roe./Irby
les Belles Gou"""""""', And as if lhal
weren't enough, Mr. Kase plans to
make homemade truflles. 100. a kind
01 cake with melted chorolate, coco­nut
OT almond 00 the side. Homemade
btelld is also brought in fresh daily as
a fine complement to the pas!a_
Pric"" fUll from 75C for a small cone
OT dish with a wafer, $1.15 lor the
medium size containing two scoops,
and $1.50 lOT a large containing three k""
•••
Gelato's is located on 654 Pari<
A~ and on 655 Monroe A"""ue_
During "Buy Back" we are oUer lng
a ~ d iscount on all Nazareth
College Insignia me/chandise.
J
Nazareth College Bookstore
OPEN
MON.-THURS. t o a .m.-7 p.m.
FRIDAY 10-4 p.m.
SATURDAY tl-3 p ,m.
DRAMA CLUB
PRESENTS MUSICAL
by Albert Capo~ulli
The "A" and "B" Teams 01 the
Nazareth College Drama dub wiD
present its first CoffeE House produc­tin
01 '"The Musical Theatre E>o,per­ience."
The event is scheduled for
May 9, 1982 at the Shultz Center
Forum and the admission is :zs.t:.
The evening wiD consist 0/ a number
01 songs tram such famous Broadway
musical5 plays /1$ A Chorus Line,
Funny GiTl. Gypsy, Hello Dolly.
Mame. Soullt Pocific, The Sound 0/
Music. Pippin. and M)/ Foi, Lady. Due
to a light and airy subject matter,
parental guidance is oot 5UggeSted,
The musical evening is under lhe
direction of Thomas Warfiekl. f",,·
Father Tanck
tu.ed in tm. coffee house wi!! be lhe
almo$t ewr famous. "An Team Duo,
Kit Behling and KeDy Row!;,nd, both
seniOT$ at N.uareth College.
This musical interlude was estab­lished
to lulfililhe need /or the Musical
Comec:Iy b for aU 01 the students who
ha"" bftn waiting '" long to leave the
theatre humming a few bo.rs from their
famous musical play, [t is encouraged
that pIltrons bring as m.x:h 01 the
sheet music ""';th tMm, /1$ the Drama
Club W<lnts everyone 10 Ie""" hum·
ming the correcllyrics.
Aher the performance. the entire
cast wiD sing around the campus as a
mQIIing mu.ical lreat. AU are g,-a·
dooolyweloomed.
to Leave Nazareth
by Carol Bolton
Fathe. Norm Tanck is leaving. Alter
serving four years in the Nazareth
community, he will be leaving at the
end of the semester ""';th the grad""t­ins
seniOT$ to assume respOnSibilities
at St. Michael's College in Toronto.
FMher Tanck, a Rochester native,
came to NaZilJeth after saving /1$ lhe
chaplain at St. John fOsher College lor
several years. Making an ell5y transi­tion
into the newly fanned Campus
Ministry, he has been largely resp0nsi­ble
for instituting a multi·faith a1m06'
pIlere On campu$ that has rendered a
healthy respect and friendship be·
tween Catholics and Protestants.
Besiodes celebrating mass and ~
chief counselor on campus, Father
T a<>ck has been responsible for lhe
hiring 01 Campus Ministry personnel
and the organization of the semester
retrelllS . He is faculty ZI$$OCillte lor
O'Connor I fi"t Roor, and ischainnan
0/ the faculty associate's commillee on
Human Sexuafity. At!. chairman 01 the
Cam""" Ute Commillee. he works
with flOCulty and students discussing
tr~nds and problems on cam ....... Act·
ing a. a liaoon, Father Tanck is :also
the counselor for hilndicapped stu,
dents on campus .
O'Brady:
At!. a ~ father,fatherTanck is
r~turning to Toronto. the central par­ish
0/ the Basilian order. His duties wiD
include the I!$tabfishment of a CampuS
Minislry al the ~ that will ........
the .tuden'" thorn! a. weD 115 some '
from the l)niver$ity 0/ Toronto, which
St. Michael'. ill a part 01.
father Tanck did not ask to lea""
N.uaAlth: he WII5 asked to ac~ptthe
position al St. Michael's at the request
01 his order_After rUne years in Roell­...
tet, the time has corne to mow on
and spread his talents, hill warm c0m­passion.
and his anri-alligator cam·
paign to OTher wayward students. But
he will not &OOn forget his time spent
al Nazareth:
"Nazareth has a special place in my
life and in my hean, I feel blessed 10
have worked in such !Ill open, friomdIy
community that ha$ shown me a love
that can't be found any place else."
f ather Nann Tanck illleaYing, and
we wish him lhe besl 01 luck in To­ronto.
It is 001 without t~atS and
regret. that we wiD say good.bye to
the man who has touched US all
thr0u9h his quiet, e/fective """""""
and through his """"r-ending, seHleas
dedication to the Nazareth corntnl1Ir
ity.
Nazareth's Knight
by Rita Rheinholt
I was rallier confu5O!d when the
instructor came into the clas$ and
announced thai oor Ies60n for the day
was to go to the french Hoose and
witness the cereroony about to take
place in honor of Frederick O'Brady,
but. IOke a good student, I walkedover
with my .c!assmates trying to figure oul
what all the fuss was about.
Quietly I edged my way to a position
where 1 had a view 01 sorts (r.::>t easy
when you're fiVIl.bo!-one) and waited
patiently for the event to be9n.
I was a ollie ne"""'-'S at first, since
the first speaker began by speaking
Frenchl I have r.::>thing against the
language, 01 Courw-it'8 rather a
prelly langull9l!---bu1 I had a sinking
f""ling that lhe whole ce-remony .....,..)d
be in French. J don't understand a
word 0/ ~ beyond oui. The ner\IOUS­ness
subsided, however, when she
translated her speech into English and
I realized that lhey woufd not be so
lhoughtless toward us who we,e
",ther caught in limbo. I listened in­tently,
realirirlg with elICh W01'd hoW
many important &nd.lnteresting Ihin9'
' get laid in fall9Jo/l9l$ I cIon't ......xr­s
tand. I felt terribly ignorant.
The speaker who i01roduced Mr.
O'Brad:y had been ... ther 'mpressively
introduced himself with a list 01 cre­dentials
that were s.lightt,t intimi<f,ating.
But when he beg.>n 10 .peaI< about
Mr. O'Brady, I was positively bug­eyed.
The thought that this short, bak!
man with the funny accent lhat I ........
nearly every day on campuo, and
barely 9""" a thousht to, was the
container of so many interesting ex~
riences. aQUllintances and talents
made me 1",,1 VERY p<OYinciai. J ap­plauded
when O'Brady received m.
medal. I applauded when he 910"" his
tittle speech (though il was all in
French and I didn't understand a
word). I applauded when everyOne
applauded, yet I!VI!n so, my applause
was hea/tlelt, I applauded the oppor­tuniTy
to wit.-.; the hoooriog 01
someone ",ho was deserving 01 honor.
It is a rare opportunity and ~ left an
awful queslion in my mind: How often
do we ignore opportunities we ha"" to
honor people who deserw ~--..en if
not quite so oI:MousIy? The oound 01
that appla use will ring in my un fora
long time to corne. 1I will ring wiler>­ewr
I ~t IIlnIeOnI! ., some sqIafI
way ~ of honor. Even if the "
appl.uae is only miM, n know wi¥
~'. t~ .
SPORTS------------- Looking Ahead styles pOpUlar thre<! years ago. or an
iII·fining 5uit may be the result of
investing for four year. in an "xpen­sive
college education instead of an
"xpensive wardrobe; howewr, yo<lf
~ Iack 01 noIabie .... ,torial splendor
could be pe1"C<!'ived lIS your indif/m.
<mee toward the job.
Tennis T earn Finishes Losing Season Continued from Page 2
n.e third lactor for s~ in a
training program is don't complain- to
anyone. including your peers. Re·
ml.'rnber that a complaint about a
policy. a company practice. or an
incompetent employee could get
blown out of prOpOrtion and fanned
t~ boss' way. When he gets wind of
it. it WIll be viewed more often than
not as a sign of discontent. He may
conclud<! that you're not happy in this
field and that!lOO should start looking
for another r>eld in which 10 pursue
your career.
by Todd K. Sherman
lbe Nazareth men's termis learn
has ended a toulil spring schedule,
The learn did not fare wen. losing all
but one of it. seven matches. lbe final
re.:ord was 1-6. The win ume off a
Iorf~ by Elmira on class day.
The leam's losses ~re always
close. and hard fought to the end. The
team IOsI to Os~. MCC. Fisher.
RIT. Hou!toton, and Eisenhower. The
loss to Hou!tolon was a ""ry close one
with the final soore being 5-4. Another
loss was to Eisenhower, due mainly to
a depleted rosIer. lbe loss occured on
the last match 01 the season.
TIle learn consisted of: Scoll &'rto­lotta,
Mike Depass, John Drain, Mike
Grose, Eric lenhard, Gary lascone.
Mark Iascone, Ken Manne, and Tom
Money. The coach 01 the team is Rob
Searle. Ken Manne is lhe firsl singles
player, Mike Grose is the second, ard
Eric Lenhard is the third. Manne ard
Grose tearned up at first doubles also,
and finished'with a 4-3 record against
tough competition.
The rest of the players alternate in
t ~ playing sJX)ts.
[ talked to Manne to """ if we could
get a preview of next season. That
season is in lhe fall semester of next
year. According to Manne there is
reason for opTimism with re9/lrd to the
fall season. Manne attributes Ihis to.
"Four excellent players comiTl9 in,"
These in addition to lhe e xperier.ced
players of this season should lead to a
good re.:ord neKt season. Manne went
on to talk about roach Searle·and how
his leadership helped the team. Manne
said with regard to Searle. "Coa.ch
Searle really put a 101 of time and
eflon in il,"
Undergrad
Banquet
Continued from Page !
Another hello was given to Guesl of
Honor M the occasion, Michael Ca·
"'$0, Execut;"" Dire.:tor of the Inde·
pendent Student Coalition. The ISC is
~ statewide organization of students of
priv~te. independent colleges.
Caruso reminded lhe 9/lthering of
lhe protest 1'l'OOYements of past de­cades
OWr issues Uke the Viet Nam
War that conspicuously ard pro­foundly
affe.:ted the lives of coilege
students.
Now, however, he said current
problems like reductions in financial
aid are not as readily identifiable. It i5
the role of .tudent lI.'aders to inform
their classmates of the importance of
recognizing lhese iswes, Nazareth
leaders. he said. have done ~Il Wlh
this fur.ction.
~For inst"""", New York State sent
lhe Iargesl student contingency in ten
years to Washington to Jlfotest the
financial aid culS" he said. "That's not
due to Michael Caruso. but to the,Jim
Stefaniaks and company-student
Ieaders.H
Other highlights of the evening W\!n'!
award presenlations to Urdergr..cJ
leBders.
The Senator of the Year Award was
giwn to not orK!. b\lttwo outSlanding
senators: seniors Janet AUSTin and
Maria Koelbel. A new plaque will be
hung in the Undergrad activities room
commemorating the annual winers of
this honor.
Two new awards were also insti.
tuted this year.
Junior lee Andre5<! was named
Club leader 01 the Year lor her out·
standing work as co-chairperson of
the Commuter Board.
Seniors Marie Barbi and Beth Win·
derl, co-chairpersons of the Social
Board, accepted the a.......-d lor Club of
the Year, an award honoring a particu­larly
activ(' and involved club.
Congramkltions to lhe men's tennis
team for your determination and el­fort,
ar.d also to coa.ch Searle for your
iimi.'. Seuer luck in the lall.
Golf Review I Our 1982 men's golf team has par·
licipated in six matches this spring.
Though lhe !IOOng Flyers had only two
wins and four losses They represented
Nazareth weU by beating Hobart and
Eisenhower while Iosmg to Brockport
State by a narrow 13 strokes,
lbe team has also played lhe Uni·
"",.ily 01 Rochester. 51. John Fisher
and IthoKa in which John Gruber led
Nazareth in a losing effort sOOoting on
8"
Some highli!tots of the season were
Slephen laSalle Jr.'. breakmg 01 the
school record for low game shot.
which ""'" a 79, with a 78 against
Eisenhower. LaSalle holds both reo
cords al NazareTh. Another highlight
was Jeff Steffler, who was imprOlled
from the number five man to the
number two man in SOIllI! matches,
The members of the golf team are
Stephen laSalle, Curt Segall. JoIuI
Gruber. Jell StOlffler, Dan McFr.dden,
Buddy Marx and Lloyd Bach. They
are coached by Debbie wwrern:e,
WE BUY & TlIAOE MUStCAL
tNSTRUMENTS. RECORDS!
Further. he may conclude lhal
!IOO'Te looking for another job already.
or at least, contemplating a move,
Either way. !IOO may be halfway out
t~ door already without you even
being aware of it. Keep in mird that
lhe company isn't going to change to
suit youl Accept the problems quietly
unlil you are in a po6ition 10 make the
changes yourself.
The phrase "dress for .lICCess" has
become a commonplace expression;
nonetheless, take ;t seriously. Dress
for SUCCess from the first day 0'1 the
job. The first impression others wiD
receive from you will be primarily
visual, Don't ",n the risk of making
that first impression a neg<>tiw one
because you are not well·groOn'Ied.
Wearing worn-OUl SMeS, clothing
Finally, and most importantly, have
long lerm ca.ur goals in mind. Don'!
assume that your fll'St job will be vour
last. s.. an e~perl at your job, but
don', master ;1 to the last degree. !f
you are 100 auentive to details. you
wiD be in that position forever, After
all, why should the company promoTe
.. short-sighted ....:>,khorse? Instead,
leam your job. and learn thejob..oo.,...
it lIS weU.
When you stop aoo think about it,
working in an on the job training
position isn't that much differ .. nt from
earning the college degree. VJhen you
entered college, yoo W<l1"e humble<! at
the thought 01 being a "\owIy~ fresh.
man; you took the time to get to
known an "imPO$SibIe" professor and
for him to gel 10 know you; you Wl!re
patient with irritating roommates; be·
cause you wanted to fir in with tl>e
college crowd, you dressed like YOU'
peers; fnally, you had a long term
gaal - graduation. You succeeded in
learning how to cope with living OUI·
side of the protection of Mom and
Dad. Apply these same principles and
!IOO will succeed in Io>arning how to '
earn your living as ~ll.
_".95; __ ·
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Transcript

the Gleaner
VOL. 57, NO. 16 NAZARETH COLLEGE OF ROCHESTER MAY 7, 1982
VILLELLA TO BE COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER
Edward Villella, the roost celebrated
male dancer in the lIistory of Ameri·
can ballet. will deliver the main ad·
dress at Nazaretll College's 55th an·
nuaol commencement. Sunday. May 16
at noon.
Villella. one of the country's leading
spokesmen for the arts. will add,ess a
record number of graduates during
the ceremony which will be held on
the east lawn of the campus. His
appea,~ at Nazareth will be one 01
Ihe highlights of the college's ye3"1ong
"Celebration of the Arts" commemo:r
rating the 15th anniversary of the
Nazareth Arts Center.
A total of 705 graduates-26 more
IMn the pwr.ous high recorded in
19n- are expected to receive degrees
during the ceremony which will feature
the awarding of honorary Doctor of
laws di>9rees to Villella; Dr. AI"'" A.
KuusislO, president of Hobart and
Wmiam Smith Colleges; and Eileen
Banquet
Honors
Undergrad
by K"lhy K .. hoe
Goodbyes and hellos marked
speeches at the Nazareth Undergrad­uate
Associatioo's Fourth Annual fn.
a"""'lTal Banquet held last Tlmrs3(!r as
Undergrad President ~nd Lori Marra
as VICnn with the Royal Danish Ba/let,
Villelta is the only American to be
asked to dance an encore at the
Bobhoi Theatre in Moscow. He has
given command performances for four
Anwrican presidents, starred in the
musical "Brigadoon" on Broadway and
performed frequently on television. In
1975 he won an Emmy award for his
CBS TV children's ballel, "Harlequin,"
and has acted as narrator for the
"Choreography by Balanchine" series
for the Public Broadcasting System.
Edward Villella, commer":e ........ 1
5p"ake r.
ART CHAIRMAN MAKES
STATEMENT AT MEETING
by Alison Kent
Dr. Roger Adams, chairman of the
N"""""h "rt cicpartmc"t, d«u0Gcd
tM tennination of sculpture and figure
drawing teacher Sam Hudson and the
Nazareth financial sit""tion and its
effects on the art department at the
Thursday rno!eting 01 the Art Associa·
tion. Statements of protest were
handed out by a small group of stu­dents
at the beginning of the meeting
e~pressing their disapproval of lhe
dKision to cui the art faculty.
According to Dr. Adams, the tenni·
nation hinges around declining enroll·
ment in the art department. The nor­mal
policy r"9"Tding f<>eully cuts is one
termination for every 20 students lost
in a department. Currently, the art
department has an average 01 10.53
STudents per eta .. , with an estimated
m of art classes having W'Oc\er 10
students. BeQ.use of this as well as
the Reagan administration and federal
furoding cutbacks, the an department
e~pects approximately 200 students
less next year. In contrast, business
department enrollment has skyrock·
eted, creating an urgent need for more
instructors. As a result it was deemed
necessary to instate cutbacks in the
an department in order to counter·
balance other rapidly expanding de·
partments.
The problem 01 dec~ning enro/lment
Looking Ahead:
is not distinctive to Nazareth, ard
AdlI_ cited statistic« ... mna!ing tMt
by 1990, tM total number 01 college
.tuden,. in N ....... Vorl< colloges will
have declined by 40%. Nazareth as
well as the other schools will have to
fight to maintain their current enrol­lments
in all areas in the future.
By issuing Hudson a terminal (one
year Iinal) contract now, Adams k>lt
his chances for future employment
would be greatly improved, becallS'! 04
the rapidly ~ning ootlook for aca­demic
positions IMt he would u1ti­rrIi'Itely
have to encounto.tT had he been
dismissed farther on in the fulUre, and
denied tenure. The present poor col­lege
financial trends would have made
it impossible for the art department to
retain Hudson for more than a rrli'lKi'
mum period of tIM;) years. Mr. Hud·
son's duties are also such that they
can be taken ove-r by other l<>eulty
members, eliminating the necessity for
part-time here is at least one career path be an that difficult. Staying in is the
for you in rrli'lnagement training. Tram. True test of your abaity. Who does and
lng programs run the gamut from who doesn't succeed in these pro-manager
in charge of the night shift at grams arod why?
local fast food restaurants to the Continued on Page 2
EDITORIAL
n.. G ....... wdd DUl, Tuesdlly
meeting, Wednesday. lrip to the prin·
ter. ThU1$Clay, delw:iline, Friday an
~ue O\l!. Cycled and re-cycled.
t also oouldn~ foresee the mistakes,
Lots of mistakes, caused by ignor­ance,
or IT\IIybe just plain stupidity.
But mistakes are the way we've
learned. And no matter what blundorrs
we've made, we haven', quit trying to
ooour best. And don't int€lld to,
Most of all, I couldn't forsee working
with 50 ""'ny good people. Yes, we've
had our difficulties. We have fought,
screamed., smoked. and laughed to­gether.
We lite certainly not
homogenous-in lact, [ have to admit
that we are a rather diverw, perhapS
even !IIZ<>ml. group of characters.
I am proud to call these oeddic:ted to a variety of
different drugs since [ was twelve and
my father died when I was eleven, so
tha!"s why I decided to takt- drugs in
the first pIac", because my mother had
a miscarriagOW lei'.
bring on our nexl contesTant. What is
your name and where are you from?"
"'Jim, my ...... me is Commy Uw, but
my friends call me Commuter lOT
short. [come from Nome, Alaska, also'
and [ am a typical housewife whose
husband won't let me out of the house
so [ have decided to be On the show
against his wishes. but he11 probably
be out looking lOT me right now and
when he finds me he'l probably beat
me to a pulp. By the way. if you lao!<
in the front row, you will see all my
children."
~Faanntastic, aha-aha. Let's start
the game. alright?"'
Applause.
~ Jim. you go in the sound·
proof/bullet proof prison and 1 will ask
Cammy a few questions. We will see
whllt the aud>enct- thinks of the
answers and the aud>ence will judge
the win"",. You aU set. Jim? 1 said.
'Are you aU set?"'
"Yes. Jim. and I am ready to win."
"Great. Aha·aha. Okay, Commy,
here is your first question. If you foond
out that your father is really your
mother after a massive se~..;hange
operation and yDUJ daughter really
belonged to your sister wllo was fool·
ing around with yoor husband even
though Jane tt-lls you that thi!; is all
true despite the fact everyone at the
office denies it, would you A) Commit
suicide, B) Cho:::«e the sweet·n·sour
sauce for your shrimp. or c) Pull a gun
from your sk;"t and shoot everyone in
the offICe?"'
"Jim, I' would probably pick A)
• CommiT suicide."
"Hey. Commy, lhe audience IovOO
your response. As a "",Iter of fact.
they all gave guns and knives for you
to do the job right now. Sut r guess
IMI is typicol. As all you soap opera
fa ...... tks know. There is nothing better
IMn .. good 5t<>te 01 dep,e=ion."
The college's 55th annual com­mencement
exercises will be !.lid Sun­day,
May 16 al noon.
M5gr. Shannon, . fonner Naz<>,eth
chaplain, earlier this year announced
that he wiU step down as chairman of
the religious studies department this
May. In December he will ret;"e as a
tuU·tifne faculty membOlr but will con·
Tinue to teach on a parT-time basis.
'A prolifIC author, MSgr. Shannon's
latest book, ~Thoma!; Merton's Dark
Path" was pubbshed in 1981. He is the
d;"ector of the Thomas Merton S0-
ciety of Rochester.
The theme oi the baccalaureate
ceremony will bOl "Asp;,.ations.w Partic,
ipants in the ceremony will be Rev.
Norman Tanck. chaplain; Rev. Paul
Nochelski, associate chaplain: Rev.
Gloria Fish, assistant cMplain; and
PresidenT Robert A. Kidera. Student
representatives will be James Stefa·
niak, president of the college'. under·
graduate association, and senior class
officers: Margaret Danaher, president;
Laura Sullivan, vice president; and
Patricia. Deck~r. secretary.treasurer.
Music wl1i be provided by the Nan·
reth CoDego!' Concert Choir under the
direcTion of Edward T. Schell and the
SIring and Bass Ensemble. Paul Rowe
of the Nazareth music faculty will be
the boo,ilon., ooO.:HI.t.
the Gleaner
Editor in Chief, ... Kathy Kehoe
Business Manager. ,Joel Odell
News Editor................ Marc LaVecchia
Co-PhotOgraphy Editor.. Denise l.iegey
Co-PhotOgraphy Editor ....................... Art Smith
Sports Editor. . ............. James Jabir
Asst. Sports Editor. . ........ _ .......... Todd Sherman
Staff: Deborah Bartlett, Carol Bolton. Albert Capozzelli. Leslie ElI;,;,tt,
Patty Ellis. Ralph Ford. Allison Kent, Barb Kelley. Barrington Mclean.
Pat Seaman. Lorena Sins. Janet Sroka, Dave Webb.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Nowhere to Eat?
Declines OAS. Membership
To The Editor.
In JanuaTY [ accepted an invitation
to Omega Alpha Sigma, to discover
what its Iunctions and goals would bOl.
After ClIreful consideration I must now
de2Nes on the ""ture of any such
dub or organization as to what it
appears to bOl an oonerfal, ~ ootterlat..
it rn<>k"" one W.a':I>. Air content is a
determination of the density oIlhe ice
cream itself. Gelato's being m heav·
ier than most ice creams. AD Ihis
points to an ice cN!am that is unusu­ally
full, c .... amy. and smooth in tex·
lure and absolutely 5Crumplious to eat
/1$ wen as more nutritious than mo6t.
for those indifferent to the wonders
0/ ice cream, Gelato's also makes
eight different kind!; 0/ pasta in ihe
Ironl window o/;ts Park A....."ue store.
Three of the sauceo are horrK:mMe,
the O1her two prov'ded by the roe./Irby
les Belles Gou"""""""', And as if lhal
weren't enough, Mr. Kase plans to
make homemade truflles. 100. a kind
01 cake with melted chorolate, coco­nut
OT almond 00 the side. Homemade
btelld is also brought in fresh daily as
a fine complement to the pas!a_
Pric"" fUll from 75C for a small cone
OT dish with a wafer, $1.15 lor the
medium size containing two scoops,
and $1.50 lOT a large containing three k""
•••
Gelato's is located on 654 Pari<
A~ and on 655 Monroe A"""ue_
During "Buy Back" we are oUer lng
a ~ d iscount on all Nazareth
College Insignia me/chandise.
J
Nazareth College Bookstore
OPEN
MON.-THURS. t o a .m.-7 p.m.
FRIDAY 10-4 p.m.
SATURDAY tl-3 p ,m.
DRAMA CLUB
PRESENTS MUSICAL
by Albert Capo~ulli
The "A" and "B" Teams 01 the
Nazareth College Drama dub wiD
present its first CoffeE House produc­tin
01 '"The Musical Theatre E>o,per­ience."
The event is scheduled for
May 9, 1982 at the Shultz Center
Forum and the admission is :zs.t:.
The evening wiD consist 0/ a number
01 songs tram such famous Broadway
musical5 plays /1$ A Chorus Line,
Funny GiTl. Gypsy, Hello Dolly.
Mame. Soullt Pocific, The Sound 0/
Music. Pippin. and M)/ Foi, Lady. Due
to a light and airy subject matter,
parental guidance is oot 5UggeSted,
The musical evening is under lhe
direction of Thomas Warfiekl. f",,·
Father Tanck
tu.ed in tm. coffee house wi!! be lhe
almo$t ewr famous. "An Team Duo,
Kit Behling and KeDy Row!;,nd, both
seniOT$ at N.uareth College.
This musical interlude was estab­lished
to lulfililhe need /or the Musical
Comec:Iy b for aU 01 the students who
ha"" bftn waiting '" long to leave the
theatre humming a few bo.rs from their
famous musical play, [t is encouraged
that pIltrons bring as m.x:h 01 the
sheet music ""';th tMm, /1$ the Drama
Club Wck has been responsible for lhe
hiring 01 Campus Ministry personnel
and the organization of the semester
retrelllS . He is faculty ZI$$OCillte lor
O'Connor I fi"t Roor, and ischainnan
0/ the faculty associate's commillee on
Human Sexuafity. At!. chairman 01 the
Cam""" Ute Commillee. he works
with flOCulty and students discussing
tr~nds and problems on cam ....... Act·
ing a. a liaoon, Father Tanck is :also
the counselor for hilndicapped stu,
dents on campus .
O'Brady:
At!. a ~ father,fatherTanck is
r~turning to Toronto. the central par­ish
0/ the Basilian order. His duties wiD
include the I!$tabfishment of a CampuS
Minislry al the ~ that will ........
the .tuden'" thorn! a. weD 115 some '
from the l)niver$ity 0/ Toronto, which
St. Michael'. ill a part 01.
father Tanck did not ask to lea""
N.uaAlth: he WII5 asked to ac~ptthe
position al St. Michael's at the request
01 his order_After rUne years in Roell­...
tet, the time has corne to mow on
and spread his talents, hill warm c0m­passion.
and his anri-alligator cam·
paign to OTher wayward students. But
he will not &OOn forget his time spent
al Nazareth:
"Nazareth has a special place in my
life and in my hean, I feel blessed 10
have worked in such !Ill open, friomdIy
community that ha$ shown me a love
that can't be found any place else."
f ather Nann Tanck illleaYing, and
we wish him lhe besl 01 luck in To­ronto.
It is 001 without t~atS and
regret. that we wiD say good.bye to
the man who has touched US all
thr0u9h his quiet, e/fective """""""
and through his """"r-ending, seHleas
dedication to the Nazareth corntnl1Ir
ity.
Nazareth's Knight
by Rita Rheinholt
I was rallier confu5O!d when the
instructor came into the clas$ and
announced thai oor Ies60n for the day
was to go to the french Hoose and
witness the cereroony about to take
place in honor of Frederick O'Brady,
but. IOke a good student, I walkedover
with my .c!assmates trying to figure oul
what all the fuss was about.
Quietly I edged my way to a position
where 1 had a view 01 sorts (r.::>t easy
when you're fiVIl.bo!-one) and waited
patiently for the event to be9n.
I was a ollie ne"""'-'S at first, since
the first speaker began by speaking
Frenchl I have r.::>thing against the
language, 01 Courw-it'8 rather a
prelly langull9l!---bu1 I had a sinking
f""ling that lhe whole ce-remony .....,..)d
be in French. J don't understand a
word 0/ ~ beyond oui. The ner\IOUS­ness
subsided, however, when she
translated her speech into English and
I realized that lhey woufd not be so
lhoughtless toward us who we,e
",ther caught in limbo. I listened in­tently,
realirirlg with elICh W01'd hoW
many important &nd.lnteresting Ihin9'
' get laid in fall9Jo/l9l$ I cIon't ......xr­s
tand. I felt terribly ignorant.
The speaker who i01roduced Mr.
O'Brad:y had been ... ther 'mpressively
introduced himself with a list 01 cre­dentials
that were s.lightt,t intimin 10 .peaI< about
Mr. O'Brady, I was positively bug­eyed.
The thought that this short, bak!
man with the funny accent lhat I ........
nearly every day on campuo, and
barely 9""" a thousht to, was the
container of so many interesting ex~
riences. aQUllintances and talents
made me 1",,1 VERY p­ewr
I ~t IIlnIeOnI! ., some sqIafI
way ~ of honor. Even if the "
appl.uae is only miM, n know wi¥
~'. t~ .
SPORTS------------- Looking Ahead styles pOpUlar threeld in which 10 pursue
your career.
by Todd K. Sherman
lbe Nazareth men's termis learn
has ended a toulil spring schedule,
The learn did not fare wen. losing all
but one of it. seven matches. lbe final
re.:ord was 1-6. The win ume off a
Iorf~ by Elmira on class day.
The leam's losses ~re always
close. and hard fought to the end. The
team IOsI to Os~. MCC. Fisher.
RIT. Hou!toton, and Eisenhower. The
loss to Hou!tolon was a ""ry close one
with the final soore being 5-4. Another
loss was to Eisenhower, due mainly to
a depleted rosIer. lbe loss occured on
the last match 01 the season.
TIle learn consisted of: Scoll &'rto­lotta,
Mike Depass, John Drain, Mike
Grose, Eric lenhard, Gary lascone.
Mark Iascone, Ken Manne, and Tom
Money. The coach 01 the team is Rob
Searle. Ken Manne is lhe firsl singles
player, Mike Grose is the second, ard
Eric Lenhard is the third. Manne ard
Grose tearned up at first doubles also,
and finished'with a 4-3 record against
tough competition.
The rest of the players alternate in
t ~ playing sJX)ts.
[ talked to Manne to """ if we could
get a preview of next season. That
season is in lhe fall semester of next
year. According to Manne there is
reason for opTimism with re9/lrd to the
fall season. Manne attributes Ihis to.
"Four excellent players comiTl9 in,"
These in addition to lhe e xperier.ced
players of this season should lead to a
good re.:ord neKt season. Manne went
on to talk about roach Searle·and how
his leadership helped the team. Manne
said with regard to Searle. "Coa.ch
Searle really put a 101 of time and
eflon in il,"
Undergrad
Banquet
Continued from Page !
Another hello was given to Guesl of
Honor M the occasion, Michael Ca·
"'$0, Execut;"" Dire.:tor of the Inde·
pendent Student Coalition. The ISC is
~ statewide organization of students of
priv~te. independent colleges.
Caruso reminded lhe 9/lthering of
lhe protest 1'l'OOYements of past de­cades
OWr issues Uke the Viet Nam
War that conspicuously ard pro­foundly
affe.:ted the lives of coilege
students.
Now, however, he said current
problems like reductions in financial
aid are not as readily identifiable. It i5
the role of .tudent lI.'aders to inform
their classmates of the importance of
recognizing lhese iswes, Nazareth
leaders. he said. have done ~Il Wlh
this fur.ction.
~For inst"""", New York State sent
lhe Iargesl student contingency in ten
years to Washington to Jlfotest the
financial aid culS" he said. "That's not
due to Michael Caruso. but to the,Jim
Stefaniaks and company-student
Ieaders.H
Other highlights of the evening W\!n'!
award presenlations to Urdergr..cJ
leBders.
The Senator of the Year Award was
giwn to not orK!. b\lttwo outSlanding
senators: seniors Janet AUSTin and
Maria Koelbel. A new plaque will be
hung in the Undergrad activities room
commemorating the annual winers of
this honor.
Two new awards were also insti.
tuted this year.
Junior lee Andre5tiw one
because you are not well·groOn'Ied.
Wearing worn-OUl SMeS, clothing
Finally, and most importantly, have
long lerm ca.ur goals in mind. Don'!
assume that your fll'St job will be vour
last. s.. an e~perl at your job, but
don', master ;1 to the last degree. !f
you are 100 auentive to details. you
wiD be in that position forever, After
all, why should the company promoTe
.. short-sighted ....:>,khorse? Instead,
leam your job. and learn thejob..oo.,...
it lIS weU.
When you stop aoo think about it,
working in an on the job training
position isn't that much differ .. nt from
earning the college degree. VJhen you
entered college, yoo We
college crowd, you dressed like YOU'
peers; fnally, you had a long term
gaal - graduation. You succeeded in
learning how to cope with living OUI·
side of the protection of Mom and
Dad. Apply these same principles and
!IOO will succeed in Io>arning how to '
earn your living as ~ll.
_".95; __ ·
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